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29/12/1999 17:25:28
 
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
00309830
Message ID:
00310126
Vues:
59
Jim,

Ah, grinders ... forgot all about them. I guess I have been away too long. < g > They may be subs or heroes in other parts of the country, but I don't think they make 'em quite the same as the grinders from CT, altho maybe that's just selective nostalgia ... < bg >

~Bonnie



>>Hi Jeff,
>>
>>Having been born and raised in New England (CT - lived there for 20-something years), I'll have to disagree with "Youse guys" being a New Englandism. New York, yes, but that's not part of New England.
>>
>>And having also lived 15 years in Atlanta, y'all better check your New England facts a little better. < bg > Any other New Englanders back me up on this one?
>>
>>~Bonnie
>
>
>Bonnie,
>
>You got it. Up here in the north country it is Ayah (yes), heeyah (here), theyah (there). Actually you have to go pretty far north to get that dialect. In CT it is mostly flat a's that give us the flavor in our speach.
>
>Some of my favorites are ginders (subs, hereos, for those of you from away from heyah), "coffee light" (with lots of milk or cream) other areas I ordered coffee light and got decaf, and Apizza (pronounced ahbeetza).
Bonnie Berent DeWitt
NET/C# MVP since 2003

http://geek-goddess-bonnie.blogspot.com
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